These are the six Moon generations ending with the three Tracy brothers: Al,
Will and Jim

Thomas Moon married Lusany Sadie Proctor. Thomas has a brother, William C. Moon
(Uncle Billy)
.
Thomas and Lusany have a son...

Archibald Moon who married, first, Emaline (Emmaline) Lester. They have one son
only, George Wm. Moon. Archibald marries a second time to Martha Melvina
Wallace. They have a daughter...

Lousannie Jane Moon (Lusany and Lousannie are pronounced the same.) She marries
William Brazell Elam. They have a daughter...

Minnie May Elam who marries Alva Tracy. They have a son...

Austin Alva Tracy who married Mary Winifred Linton. They have three sons...

Alva Austin, Wilbur Linton and James Edward Tracy

Thomas Moon
As far back as I can go on the Moon line is to my 3rd
great-grandfather, Thomas Moon, born in Tennessee in 1805-06. He had one known
brother, William C. Moon.
Thomas married Lusany Sadie Proctor in Cole Co., Missouri, on
25 April 1826. Lusany was born in Kentucky in 1804/05. Her parents were Benjamin
Proctor and Susannah Shirley.
Now a little bit about the customs in Missouri in those days.
Children rarely left their parents until they came of age, 21. There were
strict customs of courtship. Weddings were held at 1:00 p.m. at the residency of
the bride’s father. Men did not marry until they had a home for their bride.
Thomas was in Cooper Co. by the birth of his first child,
Archibald, on 10 March 1827. This was near the present town of Sedalia.
Archibald was my 2nd great-grandfather.
County research is somewhat confusing. As the first settlers
moved into Missouri there were a few counties which covered large areas. As more
immigrants arrived the larger counties would be divided into smaller counties.
Cooper County would eventually be broken up into 15 smaller counties. (This was
the pattern used by our ancestors before Missouri, in the colonial times.)
Thomas Moon shows up on the 1830 census of Cooper Co.
He was one of the first settlers into Benton Co. According to
the county history, Thomas, along with three other men came with live stock, in
1832, expecting to winter them on the rich bottom grasses. A sever winter met
them and much of the stock perished. It is recorded that Thomas came from Cooper
Co. into Benton Co. He was named a judge in the naming of William Township.
(Whatever that means?)
In 1839-40, he acquired 360 acres in 5 purchases.
He shows up in the 1840, and 1850 census of Benton Co.,
Williams Township.

Here is the 1850 census listing names of those in the
household, age, and nativity:

Thomas 45
Lucinda 46
Nick P 20
Mary A 18
Susan 16
Millissen
(Or Millissia) 14
Thomas N 7
James Polk 5
Elizabeth 1
Thomas is listed as born in Tennessee and Lucinda in
Kentucky. All children were born in Missouri. On different documents, Lusany is
also listed as Lucinda and Lusana. She signs her name with Lusany (her X mark)
Moon. The “X” would indicate she could neither read nor write. On her marriage
records she is listed as Lusany. So, that is what I will call her.
In 1851, Thomas started selling off property. The deeds list
him as a resident of Benton Co., with the last deed listing him as a resident of
Henry Co.
On 16 October 1857, Thomas and Lusany sign a deed. We will
pick them up a little later as they become part of American history.

Marriage Recorded, added

I certify that on the 25th day of April 1826 that William Walker Justice of the
Peace Joined Thomas moon_Lucany Proctor in the bands of Matrimony under my
hand__William Walker JP_ Recorded on 1 May 1826 Issac Harrison (Co. Recorder?)

Signature of Thomas Moon. I have a hobby of handwriting
analysis, which I will refer to from time to time. Interpretation: This is
probably the signature of Thomas. It looks like he also wrote his wife’s name,
although it is probably her “X”! Thomas is very intelligent with a high IQ. He
has a sharp, critical mind which can quickly determine cause and effect
relationships. It is also a clever mind. This is a very good signature.

William C. Moon

Known as “Moon,” “Old Moon,” “Uncle Billy,” he was the
brother to Thomas Moon. Uncle Billy was born in Tennessee on 15 September 1809.
The eminent historian, Hubert Howe Bancroft, lists him as one of Californian’s
66 original pioneers. He was a mountain man and a famous hunter.
In 1840, an American living in the San Joaquin Valley of
California, named Dr. John Marsh, began sending a series of letters to his
friends in Missouri extolling the virtues of California. These letters were
printed in the newspapers throughout the frontier and created immigration fever.
500 people signed a pledge to meet at Sapling Grove, now
Kansas, on 9 May 1841, with wagons ready to make the trip to the “Promised
Land.” On the day of destiny, only one man showed up. That man was a 21-year-old
Yankee schoolteacher named John Bidwell. Having just been swindled out of his
land he decided to head for California.
Eventually, 69 people were hustled up for the journey. All
they knew is that California lay west. They soon were joined by a band of
Catholic missionaries and an experienced mountain man and guide. On May 19, the
wagons started rolling.
Somewhere along the way, the Catholics and 32 of the band cut
off for Oregon, and a few more turned around and went back home. The remaining
32 kept going for California. They almost didn’t make it. It was a harrowing
journey.
They would arrive at Dr. Marsh’s house in California on 4
November 1841 after a six-month ordeal, and go down in history as the
Bartleson-Bidwell Immigration Party. They were the first overland immigration
party to California.
Bidwell would make money in the gold fields and invest in
land becoming a wealthy farmer. He was a Congressman during the Civil War and
founded the town of Chico. Knowing most of the early pioneers in California
personally, and with an excellent memory, he would become an invaluable source
for early California history.
Two men arrived at Sapling Grove too late to catch the
Bidwell wagon train. They then went to Abiquiu, New Mexico, not far from Taos,
to join another immigration company that was forming. This would be the
Workman-Rowland Party.
This company was made up with some men that were rumored to
be planning a Texas style take over of New Mexico. The Mexican authorities were
aware of these rumors. Being politically incorrect, these Americans decided that
it would be a good thing to get out of the country. Included were some traders
and trappers who had been living in Santa Fe and Taos for a number of years, 15
of whom were recruited in Santa Fe, Moon being one of them. Strangely, there was
also a group of scientist who wanted to make a study of the land.
One member of the party was Benjamin Wilson, who was going to
California in hopes of restoring his health. A mountain would be named after
him. Then they put an observatory on top of the mountain and called it Mt.
Wilson Observatory.
In all, there were 40 immigrants, 20 of who were Americans.
The rest of the party was made up of Mexicans, some women. It is possible that
some of the men returned to Missouri before starting the journey. They probably
visited relatives and outfitted for the trip.
They left in the first week of September. This allowed them
to escape the heat of the summer. This was their route: across the southwest
corner of Colorado-northwest, crossing the Colorado River-two more rivers, the
Green and Sevier-south along side Sevier and Virgin rivers-then crossing the
Mojave Desert-through Cajon Pass-to the San Gabriel Mission.
In the words of one historian, the trip was "uneventful."
They arrived at the San Diego Old Mission in early November
(10th or 14th?). This was the second immigration company to California. It was
the first to Southern California. (Technically it was the first wagon train to
California. The Bidwell Party started out as a wagon train but abandoned their
wagons along the way. Then, they literally straggled into California.)
Only Workman and Rowland had any intentions of staying in
California.
There were other Americans who had entered California before.
Some were trappers and others just people getting off ships. Most looked around
and left. A few stayed. However, these were the first two organized immigration
companies to go to California.

A Few Words About Mountain Men
By nature they were independent, adventurous, with a dislike
of authority. Most were illiterate. Uncle Billy always signed his name with an
'”X”.
They did not work alone against the wilderness and the
Indians as you see in the movies. In order to survive they had to be very smart
and organized. They worked in brigades with trappers being at the end of the
chain. There was a large support group who took care of the camp, etc. Trappers
loved their life. None got rich. The mortality rate was high. At one time there
were over 130 trappers in New Mexico. A year later only 16 were left alive.
Beaver hats were enormously popular in Europe, but by the
mid-1830's the beaver were trapped out and the fashion changed to silk hats.
An Indian wife was a status symbol. For two horses and a
rifle you could buy the prettiest girl in a tribe. However, you had to compete
with the Indian braves for the hand of a squaw. With an Indian wife, the trapper
would be welcome into Indian society and have a base of operation. It wasn't
unusual for a trapper at rendezvous to spend his entire year’s earnings just on
his Indian wife.

California in 1841
Mexican control was confined to a narrow strip of land along
the sea from San Diego in the South to Sonoma, a short distance from San
Francisco, in the North.
There were hundreds of large cattle ranches, which supplied
the world with valuable hides and tallow. The hides (California banknotes) and
tallow were taken to the waiting ships in old wooden ox carts like you see in
the movies. There were no ports for the ships. Everybody had to improvise a port
whenever needed. They would load up a rowboat, go out to the ship and unload. It
was a primitive way of doing things but it got the job done.
Ships from all over the world first dropped anchor at
Monterey, which was the official customs house for all of California. Here they
had to pay duties and get permission to ply the coast and do business. (I do not
think any of the duty money ever made its way back to the central government in
Mexico City.) Most ships were American from the Eastern States, mainly out of
Boston. The profits for the ship owners were immense!
Strangely, the Californians (Californios) manufactured
nothing for themselves. Example: Tallow would be shipped to Boston, made into
candles, shipped back to California and sold to the very people who supplied the
tallow in the first place. They didn't even make a product as simple as a
candle.
Trading hides and tallow, the Californios would go aboard
ship where a shop was set up, and buy virtually any product from anywhere in the
world.
There were only 100 to 150 white foreigners in California.
The Ranch owners were generous to the newcomers to a fault. Always welcoming
them into their homes, giving whatever they had in food and terrible wine, never
accepting payment.
Nothing was known of the interior. The Mexican authorities
were desperate to get white settlers into this vast unknown wilderness.

Richard Henry Dana
The world's eyes would be drawn to California a few years
before the gold rush in a most unusual way. It is a story few people know.
In 1831, a 16-year-old boy named Richard Henry Dana entered
Harvard. A 16-year-old student at Harvard was not unusual in those days. He came
from a distinguished upper class family: A very distinguished family. His
grandfather was a delegate to the Continental Congress as well as being this
countries first Ambassador to Russia. His father was a poet, a man of letters.
It was a very very upper class family. His father believed that America should
be run by a monarchy.
School went well for the first two years then young Dana contracted measles,
which caused him to have problems with his eyes. The weakening of his eyes
forced him out of school.
He came up with a rather strange solution to regain his
health. He decided to sign aboard a trading ship, as a common seaman, for a
two-year voyage plying the waters off California. His distinguished, very very
upper class family was stunned. Here was a boy born to privilege giving it all
up for two years of sheer hell.
In 1834, now 19 years old, Richard Henry Dana set sail. This
would be the end of our story except for the fact that he kept a daily diary.
His diary would make him famous.
Dana spoke Spanish, so the ship captain made him his
interpreter. Each day he wrote of the sea, the land, and the people of
California. He wrote of California being a fascinating land with great
potential.
After the voyage he returned to Harvard, graduating head of
his class in 1837 then entered law school. In 1840 he set up a law practice in
Boston, dealing mostly with maritime cases. That same year he published his
diary.
It became an instant best seller, being published not only in
the United States but also in England. The story goes that the first day it was
on the market in Liverpool, 2000 sailors purchased the book. The British Royal
Navy gave every sailor a copy. Sailors carried the book, and it’s story of the
sea and this enchanting unknown land, throughout the world. Some say it is the
greatest book ever written about the sea. It is certainly a very good book on
early California. When gold was discovered a few short years later it was not in
some unheard of place but that exotic land of…California!
Although a successful lawyer for the rest of his life, Dana
would say that his great success "…was a boys work…"
Never out of print in 160 years, still a good read: Two
Years Before the Mast.
It was in this world of Richard Henry Dana that Uncle Billy
entered in November of 1841.

The Famous Moon HouseLike most early California trappers, Moon made his way to
Sutter's Fort. After a couple of years he started to look for a place to settle.
There was one place nobody wanted to settle. That was Yerba Buena, now called
San Francisco. It was a marshy, windy, miserable place.
There are several different drawings done of Sutter’s Fort
over a period of years. I have chosen this one because it is a sketching done in
1849, by J. W. Revere, U S Navy. This is what it looked like when Uncle Billy
worked and lived at the fort. The artist comes back into our story.

“Nearly everybody who came to California,” wrote John Bidwell,
(who stayed on at the Fort to help Sutter) “made it a point to reach Sutter’s
Fort. Sutter was one of the most liberal and hospitable of men. Everybody was
welcome –one man or a hundred, it was all the same.”

In 1844, Moon, along with a few others from the
Workman-Rowland Party, left Sutter's Fort, making their way north and settled
along the Sacramento River. In Frontier America rivers were your highways. You
always established your home and farms along a river. He first built an adobe
house on the west side of the river bank, high enough to escape the flooding.
Then, nobody is sure of the exact year, he started building a
wooden house. In the very early days of Northern California, next to Sutter's
Fort, the Moon house was probably the most famous. Henry L. Ford ("…a good man
of strong prejudice.") helped in building this dwelling and would be Moon's
partner for several years.
The house was made of seasoned timber using large oak trees
that abound on the property. It was probably built with wooden nails.

A contemporary describes the house
"Probably this was the first timber house in all of Tehama County. The Moon
house was built of oak logs, hewed and squared to form the exterior and
partitions. Over the log sidewalls were placed clapboards, shaved with drawing
knives. Oak shakes, fashioned by hand, formed the roof. The building was 20 by
40, two stories high with four sleeping rooms on the upper floor and two rooms
on the lower floor, one of which was the store and barroom, the other the
kitchen and dining room. The upper floor was of heavy oak clapboard surfaced to
smoothness, while the lower floor was of genuine oak puncheon. At either end of
the structure was a chimney of brick with two fireplaces on each floor." A
traveler records in his diary dated 17 November 1850 that he slept on the lower
flower of this "new unfinished house… The floor overhead was very open and the
upper rooms occupied by the mechanics employed on the house.."
I believe I read somewhere else that the house did have a
basement.

For the next few decades everything came
together at the Moon House. It was a meeting place, hotel, stagecoach stop,
paddleboat landing, post office, bar, court, store, ferry and etc.…
In 1845, Moon accompanied his neighbors on a trip to Monterey
where they obtained Mexican land grants for the land they had settled. Moon
didn't bother asking for a land grant as he considered the document worthless,
didn't think it would hold up in court.
Technically, to qualify for a Mexican land grant you had to
become a Mexican citizen, join the Catholic Church, and marry a Mexican woman.
These requirements were not always strictly enforced. The settlers on the east
bank of the river got their land grants and those on the west: Moon, Merritt,
and Ford, became squatters. Apparently they had no problems from the Mexican
authorities. Eventually, in 1852, Moon would obtain title to his ranch under a
California possessory act.

In the late part of 1845, Moon would also be involved in the
first civilized manufacturing venture in the county. Moon, along with Peter
Lassen, and Ezkiel Merritt, took what has been described as a large, rickety
canoe, 20 miles up a tributary of the Sacramento River where they quarried
grindstones. (Another version says that they put the stones on pack mules and
hauled them to the Sacramento River where they then loaded them into the canoe.)
They loaded the canoe to within 6 inches of sinking, then
came down the Sacramento River selling the grindstones along the way. (Remember,
the settlers lived on the banks of the river.) They landed at Sutter’s Fort and
went as far as San Francisco.
Apparently, the venture was not too successful as they
returned with some stones and had to dump them. The tributary they quarried was
called by its Indian name, Capay. But to this day it is called Stony Creek or
Grindstone Creek. Twenty years ago, two of these stones still existed in a
little town in Northern California called Milford. I recently wrote to the local
historian and was given the name and address of the owner on these historical
artifacts. I wrote the man, but received no reply. I guess he is not an
historian.
For 20 years I have completely misunderstood what happened to
the grindstone quarry after our famous ancestor paddled his own canoe. I assumed
that it remained in its primeval state guarded by the Indians, antelope,
beavers, and etc. until I planned to rediscover it for history sake.
I recently discovered that the site was a thriving commercial
quarry for many years, although now abandoned. As it was out of the way of my
usual historical trekkings, I have not been to the site.
For those of you who are adventurous, I can give you
directions on how to get close, then let us hope there are some locals who can
direct you to the site as it exists today.
You take I-5 to Willows. Then go east on 162, about 20 miles
to the town of Elk Creek. Now go south about 12 miles on Rd 306 to a bridge on
your left that crosses Stony Creek and connects with Rd 303 on the east bank.
Mother says that the original bridge was built by her brother, Uncle Gordon.
However, she believes that bridge has been replaced by a new one.
I think that the quarry site is on the east side of the creek
close to the bridge. If you are lucky, you might find a local who can guide you
to the site. Make sure you have a map because it looks very much like the land
that Uncle Billy first entered.

LITERARY NOTE: My writing style is an informal mixture of genealogy
method and standard literary writing. To those of you who are not familiar with
the liberalism of genealogy research, note taking and writing, some of the
sentences may seem awkward. Example: John Jones born (or b) 1 January 1900,
instead of John Jones was born January 1, 1900. Also, all source quotations are
verbatim, including actual original errors of grammar, spelling and punctuation.

My family history web site has 79 chapters. If you would like to
know more about the other chapters then go to my Home Page
www.thetracyfamilyhistory.net